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  • NIOSH
    Optimum Mine Designs To Minimize Coal Bumps: A Review Of Past And Present U. S. Practices

    By Matthew J. DeMarco, Anthony T. Iannacchione

    Coal bumps have presented serious mining problems in the U.S. throughout the 20th Century. Fatalities and injuries have resulted when these destructive events occur at the working face. Persistent bum

  • NIOSH
    Using the Coal Mine Roof Rating (CMRR) to Assess Roof Stability in U.S. Coal Mines

    By D. Debasis, Christopher Mark, Gregory M. Molinda

    The stability of any underground opening is, in large part, a function of the strength of the rock mass which surrounds it. The Coal Mine Roof Rating (CMRR) has been developed to quantify the defects

  • NIOSH
    Investigation Of Longwall Face Ventilation Air-Splitting Methods For Improved Dust Control

    By J. A. Organiscak

    Two types of airflow splitting methods for improving longwall dust control were investigated by NIOSH's Pittsburgh Research Laboratory. These methods included a translucent mesh barrier and a sta

  • NIOSH
    RI 7850 Support Performance of Hydraulic Backfill - A Preliminary Analysis

    By John R. M. Hill

    The Bureau of Mines performed elastic-plastic, finite-element analyses to investigate the support performance of hydraulic backfill. A mathematical model was developed for two vertically adjacent stop

    Jan 1, 1974

  • NIOSH
    RI 9214 - Comparison of Aerial and Ground Surveying of Subsidence Over an Active Longwall

    By John C. LaScola

    The Bureau of Mines repeatedly surveyed a grid of monuments over an active longwall mine panel in southwestern Pennsylvania during a 1-year period. Both conventional ground surveying techniques and ph

    Jan 1, 1988

  • NIOSH
    Appendix I – Computer Program Listing

    By R. V. Ramani, C. B. Manula, A. Owili-Eger

    • MINE VENTILATION NETWORK PROBLEM (NATURAL SPLITTING; FIXED • QUANTITY BRANCHES; METHANE SIMULATION; NETWORK TOPOLOGY REVISION; • ABSOLUTE PRESSURE) • NFIXB = NO. OF FIXED QUANTITY BRANCHES • DD(

    Jan 1, 1975

  • NIOSH
    Methods For Evaluating Explosion Resistant Ventilation Structures (56dd1ec5-9a7a-4c77-8c39-01fff362b2c3)

    By M. J. Sapko

    The Pittsburgh Research Laboratory (PRL) of the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH) has conducted full-scale explosion experiments, to evaluate the strength characteristics o

  • NIOSH
    Model Application (d73f9f12-7121-4dff-b169-3e1db6f2f7b7)

    By C. B. Manula, R. L. Sanford, R. A. Rivell

    A central requirement for using simulation models is the need for retrospect testing to validate experimental conclusions. Acceptance of a model by managers and safety practitioners is more likely to

    Jan 1, 1974

  • NIOSH
    RI 8317 Experimental Studies on the Origin and Accumulation of Coalbed Gas (0d35d6e3-7153-442c-8787-db4c900b2345)

    By Ann G. Kim

    The Bureau of Mines investigated factors that influence the formation of methane and other hydrocarbon gases in coal, which is an integral part of the coalification process. Coalification begins with

    Jan 1, 1978

  • NIOSH
    RI 7803 Smog Chamber Reactivities Of Emissions From Leaded And Lead-Free Fuels

    By G. P. Sturm

    This work was undertaken by the Bureau of Mines in cooperation with the Environmental Protection Agency to determine photochemical specific reactivities of emissions from automobiles using leaded-prem

    Jan 1, 1973

  • NIOSH
    RI 7131 Carbonizing Properties Of Coals From Fayette, Greene And Washington Counties, Pa.

    By D. E. Wolfson

    The Bureau of Mines carbonized 21 coal samples from Fayette, Greene, and Washington Counties, Pa., at 900° C, using the Bureau of Mines-American Gas Association (BM-AGA) method, and determined yields

    Jan 1, 1968

  • NIOSH
    RI 8719 Stability Relationships Between Petalite (LiAISi4010) and Spodumene (LiAISi20S)

    By Kenneth O. Bennington

    This investigation is part of the Bureau of Mines research effort directed at advancing mineral technology and minimizing energy requirements for extractive metallurgy. The emplacement of the primary

    Jan 1, 1982

  • NIOSH
    IC 7421 Use of Rock Dust and Water under the Federal Mine Safety Code in Limiting Coal-Dust Explosions

    By C. W. Owings, J. J. Forbes

    "INTRODUCTION The recent coal-dust explosions in Illinois and Indiana have again brought forcibly to the attention of mining men the fact that mines which liberate little or no methane can have widesp

    Jun 1, 1947

  • NIOSH
    Improved Monitoring Systems For Rock Noise Detection - Objective

    Design a new acoustic monitoring system to more accurately forecast impending rock bursts, and to assist in understanding the rock burst phenomenon. Background Rock bursts arc the major cause of

    Jan 1, 1989

  • NIOSH
    RI 8617 Determination of Ferric Ion Diffusion and Activity Coefficients From Chronopotentiometric Data

    By B. W. Madsen

    As part of a program to maintain an adequate supply of minerals and metals to meet national economic and strategic needs, the Bureau of Mines conducted research to determine the diffusion coefficients

    Jan 1, 1981

  • NIOSH
    RI 2896 Production of Maganese & Silica Curcible in the Induction Furnace

    By C. N. Schuette

    "The production of silica and magnesia crucibles in the induction furnace was attempted and achieved in the laboratory of the Pacific Experiment Station of the United States Bureau of Mines. This work

    Oct 1, 1929

  • NIOSH
    RI 2303 Methane In California Gold Mines

    By E. D. Gardener, Byron O. Pichard

    "Methane, frequently called fire damp or marsh gas, is very well known to coal miners but to thy average gold miner it means nothing, as it is not associated generally with the rock formations in whic

    Dec 1, 1921

  • NIOSH
    Mine Rescue Training Simulations And Technology

    By Linda L. Chasko, Larry D. Stowinsky, Ronald S. Conti

    Mine operators often rely on mine rescue teams to save lives during an underground emergency such as an underground fire, explosion or roof fall. It is extremely important that team members are provi

  • NIOSH
    A human component to consider in your emergency management plans: the critical incident stress factor

    By Kathleen Madland Kowalski

    In recent years the issue of human stress response in emergency workers has begun to receive attention. This paper presents a rationale for considering human stress as a significant factor in the mana

    Aug 1, 1998

  • NIOSH
    RI 7178 Chlorine Dissolution Of Several Ferroalloys

    By D. H. Chambers

    Digestion studies were undertaken to develop a method for the rapid dissolution of high-temperature ferroalloy scrap. Laboratory tests showed: (1) dissolution of alloy scrap with ferric ion as the lea

    Jan 1, 1968